The dollar will remain vulnerable to underlying pressure on fears over the underlying debt situation. There are, however, very important vulnerabilities in all the major economic blocs which should offer some degree of dollar protection, especially with the balance of payments situation improving. In this environment, selling pressure on the US currency should be contained despite underlying vulnerabilities.
Key events for the forthcoming week
Date |
Time (GMT) |
Data release/event |
Thursday June 4th |
11.00 |
Dank of England interest rate decision |
Thursday June 4th |
11.45 |
ECB interst rate decision |
Friday June 5th |
12.30 |
US employment report |
Dollar:
Underlying confidence in the US fundamentals will remain fragile with continuing fears over the implications of a rising debt burden. Any further increase in bond yields would also risk undermining the signs of economic stabilisation. Such a trend would increase pressure for further Federal Reserve action which would increase medium-term inflation fears. The dollar is still in a position to gain support from a lack of alternatives, especially as an improved savings ratio will tend to lessen longer-term vulnerability.
The dollar weakened to 7-month lows on reduced confidence in the US economy and an overall reduction in defensive support. The currency was able to find some support over the second half of the week, but rallies quickly attracted selling pressure.
The US consumer confidence data was stronger than expected with a sharp rise to 54.9 in May from a revised 40.8 the previous month. This was the highest figure since October 2008 and the Richmond Fed data was also stronger than expected.
The headline US housing data was close to expectations with existing home sales rising to an annual rate of 4.68mn in April from a revised 4.55mn the previous month. Prices continued to decline over the year while there was a rise in inventories. Although there is evidence of interest in buying foreclosure-related properties, the rise in inventories dampened expectations of more than a limited recovery in the sector.
The sales data was overshadowed to some extent by a further reported rise in mortgage delinquencies for the first quarter of 2009 with 12% of mortgages either behind in payments or in a foreclosure proceedings. The further increase in delinquencies increased fears over the housing sector.
The US jobless claims was close to expectations with a decline in initial claims to 623,000 in the latest week from 636,000 previously while continuing claims continued to increase to a fresh record high. The stronger headline durable goods orders report was offset by a large downward revision.
The dollar was unsettled by speculation that the US Federal Reserve would move to increase the scope of asset-backed securities buying which increased fears over the bond-market outlook and triggered further fears over the underlying US fundamentals.
The latest Treasury auctions of bonds received strong demand and immediate fears over the US credit rating also eased which helped support the dollar to some extent on reduced fears over the immediate risk of reserve diversification.
The General Motors situation was watched closely amid strong expectations that the company would file for bank-ruptcy probably at the beginning of June. Optimism that that uncertainty would be removed was offset by fears that there would be renewed stresses in the manufacturing sector following any bank-ruptcy filing. |